Showing posts with label singers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label singers. Show all posts

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Filipinos in Vietnam sing their ‘hearts out’

It was late night at a popular night club in Vung Tau.

Gaile, the club’s Filipino singer, was charming clubbers with her nifty dance steps and melodious voice as usual.

She was singing English songs before suddenly switching to popular Vietnamese ballads to the pleasant surprise of the audience.

At weekends Gaile makes the one-hour hydrofoil trip to Ho Chi Minh City to perform at its myriad clubs so that she can earn some extra money to send home, she says.

Paid US$30-40 per night, Filipino singers like Gaile can be seen performing at many upscale bars, clubs, and restaurants in Vietnam’s urban centers and popular vacation spots.

They please a wide range of audience by singing Latin rhythms, catchy romantic ballads, jazzy melodies, and many more.

With their well-known gift for music and English, Filipino singers like Gaile travel and perform virtually around the world, says Hoang Thuan, manager of the Filipino-Latino band Gipsy Nation.

Gaile, after living in Thailand, Cambodia, and Indonesia, has decided to settle down in Vietnam.

She explains: “Competition in the Philippines is fierce and chances are limited. So we singers travel to wherever we can make a better living. We look just like Vietnamese and it is easy to adjust to the food, weather, and people here.”

mariedel 2

Singer Mariedel

Life is not easy

However, there are downsides too.

Not all of them can secure long-term contracts with bands or clubs; most have to make do with unstable incomes, waiting for offers and calls from managers.

Tet, the biggest holiday in Vietnam, is the busiest and probably most awaited time of the year for the Filipino singers.

The massive demand means they can easily earn then what they otherwise earn in three months of work hard, a manager says.

Short-term deals see these singers wander from place to place.

One 40-year-old, who preferred to be known as just R., has moved more than a dozen of times during her 10 years in Vietnam with her husband and three-year-old daughter.

To manage in expensive HCMC, Cyndy and Alex, a couple who have moved several times, share a US$200 apartment with others.

Since they send money to their families back home, the singers are not extravagant in their shopping either.

“We usually shop for clothes and accessories in markets like An Dong or Tan Binh for they sell a cheap and wide range of goods,” a singer who calls herself Red on stage said.

Now, after a full schedule during Tet in HCMC, Gaile has returned to Vung Tau to continue her nightly shows at the club.

She is one of the fortunate ones. Joan and Kay, her friends, have no plans and are waiting for contracts with bands in HCMC.

However, one said: “we are born to sing and we are proud of it. Filipino singers are everywhere in the world, from first class restaurants to some street corners. No matter where we are, when we sing, we sing our hearts out.”

Nothing can apparently douse their passion for music.

 mariedel 1

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Saturday, January 22, 2011

Singers reflect on roles

Singers Day: Hoang Hai performs at a conference on the music industry held in northern Quang Ninh Province. — VNS Photo

Singers Day: Hoang Hai performs at a conference on the music industry held in northern Quang Ninh Province. — VNS Photo

QUANG NINH — The respect of singers for the public and for composer's copyrights were central topics at a recent conference held within the framework of the fifth annual Singers Day this week in the northern province of Quang Ninh.

Musician Le Quang, one of the initiators of the day six years ago, said that today's singers were better at communicating with the public and, although sometimes rivals in competing for the music market, with each other. Singers were showing greater respect for the audience through their enhanced performing styles and musical productions targeted at specific audiences, Quang said.

Recent conflicts over copyright between singers and songwriters reflected a lack of professionalism in the country's music industry, said singer Hoang Hai, noting that he had avoided such conflicts by generally working with established composers and signing proper contracts with them, even those who were his close friends.

"Some singers are asking to be paid more for their labours, which is fine," Hai said, acknowledging that the topic of payments was rather too "sensitive" to be discussed in greater detail.

"But they shouldn't ask too much," he added. "I think a singer should contribute to society within a possible scope that they can manage."

Hai elaborated by saying a singer could not be expected to join in all charity shows and needed to be able to be selective in where he or she could appear.

Overseas Vietnamese singer Ngoc Anh recounted her experiences dealing with the media, which fiercely criticised her performance in a see-through top in the 1990s. She kept silent at the criticism and drew a lesson to dress more properly when performing.

"I think that's a kind of professional and cultural standard," she said.

Singers Day 2011 gathered over 200 local and overseas Vietnamese singers to events which ended yesterday, including performances and a charity gala to raise a funds for the poor in Quang Ninh. — VNS

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Thursday, January 13, 2011

Vietnam Singer’s Day to raise funds and discuss career

Two hundred Vietnamese singers will attend the Singer’s Day in Ha Long city, in the northern province Quang Ninh on January 17-19.

Newbie and professional singers in Vietnam and overseas will participate in the event, according to Dam Vinh Hung, Vietnam’s famous pop star and also an organization member.

The event represents a chance for singers to meet up, share experience and exchange career notes. A three-hour seminar will be set up, focusing on celebrity culture, celebrities and community service, artists as objects of idolization, and artists and the internet.

As part of the program, the celebrities will join a charity auction and pay a visit to poor families in Quang Ninh province.

They will also have some fun touring around Ha Long Bay, one of the world’s natural heritages.

On the night of January 19, the singers will hit the stage with a grand performance to raise funds for charity.

Besides singers, models, actors and actress like Hong Anh, Quyen Linh, Chi Bao are also expected to join the event.

This is the fifth time Vietnam Singer’s Day is organized. Last year it was held in the coastal city Quy Nhon.

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Thursday, January 6, 2011

ASEAN Golden Voice Festival opens

The ASEAN Golden Voice Festival 2011 opened last night at the HCMC Television Theater, with 17 singers from ASEAN nations.

The singers used the opportunity to meet other singers from the region and introduce their country’s music to Vietnamese audiences, reports VietnamPlus.

Last night at the theater at 14 Dinh Tien Hoang Street in HCMC’s District 1 singers performed folk and traditional genres in their native language. They will perform pop songs in English on Friday night. The awards gala party on Saturday night will be broadcast live on HTV9.

Singers Thu Minh, Kasim Hoang Vu, Do Tung Lam and H’Zina Bya will represent Vietnam. The other 13 contestants are Plengpraphun Kingthong and Wongloung Sirilux from Thailand, Khim Su Su Naing and Mr.Kyaw Zin Min from Myanmar, Netta Kusumah Dewi and Hershon from Indonesia, Uela Basco from the Philippines, Samsann Annda and Vannika  from Cambodia, Iqwal Hafiz and Katherine Chan from Malaysia and FIQ and Moon from Brunei.

Two singers from Japan, Annabel Yu and Okuma Ryo, will attend the event as guest singers.

The judge panel will include song-writer Tran Long An, Nguyen Ngoc Thien, Duong Thu of the host country, Indira Sotyawati from Indonesia and Toshiba Emi from Japan.

The organizers will award four gold medals, four silver and four bronze medals and an audience choice prize.

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ASEAN Golden Voice Festival opens

The ASEAN Golden Voice Festival 2011 opened last night at the HCMC Television Theater, with 17 singers from ASEAN nations.

The singers used the opportunity to meet other singers from the region and introduce their country’s music to Vietnamese audiences, reports VietnamPlus.

Last night at the theater at 14 Dinh Tien Hoang Street in HCMC’s District 1 singers performed folk and traditional genres in their native language. They will perform pop songs in English on Friday night. The awards gala party on Saturday night will be broadcast live on HTV9.

Singers Thu Minh, Kasim Hoang Vu, Do Tung Lam and H’Zina Bya will represent Vietnam. The other 13 contestants are Plengpraphun Kingthong and Wongloung Sirilux from Thailand, Khim Su Su Naing and Mr.Kyaw Zin Min from Myanmar, Netta Kusumah Dewi and Hershon from Indonesia, Uela Basco from the Philippines, Samsann Annda and Vannika  from Cambodia, Iqwal Hafiz and Katherine Chan from Malaysia and FIQ and Moon from Brunei.

Two singers from Japan, Annabel Yu and Okuma Ryo, will attend the event as guest singers.

The judge panel will include song-writer Tran Long An, Nguyen Ngoc Thien, Duong Thu of the host country, Indira Sotyawati from Indonesia and Toshiba Emi from Japan.

The organizers will award four gold medals, four silver and four bronze medals and an audience choice prize.

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Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Pop singers take Blue Wave prizes

Winners: Pop stars My Tam and Dam Vinh Hung perform on stage. They both won Artist of the Year honours in the Lan Song Xanh (Blue Wave) Awards. — File Photo

Winners: Pop stars My Tam and Dam Vinh Hung perform on stage. They both won Artist of the Year honours in the Lan Song Xanh (Blue Wave) Awards. — File Photo

HCM CITY — Pop stars My Tam and Dam Vinh Hung on Saturday won the Artist of the Year prizes at the Lan Song Xanh (Blue Wave) Awards 2010 instituted by radio station Voice of HCM City (VOH).

Both singers have released new albums, organised shows and participated in various charity activities this year.

Tam and Hung also received the "Favourite Singer" prize together with eight other singers.

Pop singer Hien Thuc received the "Favourite Album" prize for Kim Nguu (Taurus), released in June.

The album has nine songs on love composed by Viet Anh, Pham Hoa Khanh and Nguyen Hoang Duy. The album also includes two soundtracks from the TV series Cong Mat Troi (The Gate of the Sun).

Ha Noi-based pop singer Thao Trang won the award for the most promising female singer while her HCM City counterpart Noo Phuoc Thinh took the award in the male category.

The "Favourite Composer" prize was given to ten composers including Ho Hoai Anh and Nguyen Van Chung, as also young singers Thuy Tien and Nguyen Hai Phong.

The Lan Song Xanh Awards, given away annually since 1997, honours singers, bands, musicians and music producers.

Most winners are chosen by VOH listeners while artists of the year and promising singers are nominated by experts and journalists. — VNS

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